Sambo the Elephant will be back at Wat Phnom!
Posted: Wed May 28, 2014 9:21 am
Ok. I know this might be considered cruel to most. Because it is. But I have to admit, Wat Phnom lost its charm when Sambo left, and most it's character when they took out all the monkeys.
One of my favourite memories from the first time my mom came to Cambodia for a visit from the States was taking a ride around Wat Phnom on Sambo (one loop for $20, ouch), during rush hour traffic, dodging traffic (ok, maybe the traffic was dodging us).
It was also fun driving through the city and then , WOW, out of nowhere, there's a huge elephant you're about to collide with! !
And all that said, there is NO WAY Sambo should be back to work at Wat Phnom! Her feet are fucked, and she's old. I personally think the owner should have to do 10 years of community service by giving backpackers a free piggyback ride around Wat Phnom himself. Despicable.
The article says she "might" come back, but I'm guessing it's certain. As long as the owner and some random people are getting their palms greased, it's a done deal.
Short-lived retirement for Sambo?
Two years after she was walked out of the city in the middle of the night to a quiet life of retirement on the outskirts of the capital, Sambo, Phnom Penh’s iconic and much-beloved elephant, might soon be back at work entertaining tourists.
With funding for her recently concluded rehabilitation program now gone, her owner is insisting he has little choice but to begin showcasing her once more at Wat Phnom, a decision contested by the elephant rescue organisation that bankrolled her two-year sabbatical.
Sin Sorn, who owns Sambo, says that as the pair are no longer supported by the Elephant Asia Rescue and Survival foundation (EARS), he cannot afford to pay for her food and medical care without the steady income he earned for the more than 20 years that she was a tourist attraction at the temple.
The decades that 54-year-old Sambo spent walking on hard concrete and gravel while giving rides resulted in a painful abscess on a foot, overgrown toenails and a host of other issues, causing her to limp.
After a veterinarian retained by EARS warned in 2012 that a further deterioration in her “painfully lame†condition could lead Sambo to collapse on the city’s streets, Sorn agreed to move her to a plot of land for rest and medical treatment.
That contract expired in March, leaving EARS and Sorn at loggerheads about what happens next.
“I do not have money to support her anymore. I will bring her back to Wat Phnom, but I will not allow people to ride her while she walks like in the past,†Sorn said yesterday at the sandy Phnom Penh Thmey compound where Sambo has lived since February 2012, as the elephant shovelled sugar cane into its mouth behind him.
“I spend $15 a day just on Sambo’s food … [In the city], she will just stand in one place and tourists or people can touch her, take photos with her or buy fruits that I will sell to feed her.â€
EARS has spent $45,000 over the two-year period paying for Sambo’s medical care and a monthly compensation package for Sorn to help fund an assistant caregiver, food, electricity and water and to cover his loss of earnings.
Sambo’s feet are in a far better condition than before, but EARS founder and CEO Louise Rogerson says sending her back to the city would be the worst possible decision for the elephant’s welfare.
“She’s never going to fully recover 100 per cent, but what we’ve done is given her an intensive medical program over the last two years,†she said.
“It has been a very slow rehabilitation process, there is absolutely no way she can go back to the city. It would be impossible for her to walk on hot tarmac roads.… It would basically be animal cruelty.â€
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http://www.phnompenhpost.com/national/s ... ment-sambo